POPULARITY
Wir präsentieren eine klare, kontroverse Haltung. Lasst uns euer Feedback weiterhin unter kontakte@meine-tage-podcast.de wissen.
-- 在 YouTube 上看這集:https://youtu.be/6uQy0ZsDp3U -- 訂閱壽司坦丁,別錯過國際上最新、有趣的社會科學研究發現! 喜歡有畫面感的朋友,也可以在 YouTube 找到壽司坦丁的身影。 -- 壽司坦丁 Sociostanding 的其他精彩影片: 逃離中國:台灣(外省人)的創傷與記憶|在中國受的傷,卻成為外省人在台灣自我療癒的記憶 https://youtu.be/LjMiRspthHM 「信心」和「自我實現的預言」:矽谷銀行倒閉&台灣缺蛋 https://youtu.be/C0MRQ1QHcV4 約炮的社會學研究/破除一些關於暈船、女性高潮、性愛分離的迷思 https://youtu.be/h3p0tObkn98 看見中南海之外:中國官員的「升遷機制」和「清零災難」的關係 https://youtu.be/_hYG9urXHBU 中國的「大監禁時代」:從新疆鎮壓/清零/白紙運動看習近平的治理邏輯 https://youtu.be/I4sHPxToexc 習近平與「弱者聯盟」:習快速登基的歷史條件/二十大可能是中共崩解的起點? https://youtu.be/8KJap6TJAcw 越痛苦的宗教越容易成功?為什麼人在宗教中容易變抖M?社會科學解釋宗教中的「不理性」 https://youtu.be/-r-07Rfw9Aw 台灣女人可能是東亞最「命苦」的一群人?社會科學怎麼測量「性別不平等」? https://youtu.be/BvOcgKZuads 同性伴侶當爸媽:同性戀可以生/養小孩嗎?台灣護家盟最愛的社會學者,如何掀起一場激烈的科學論戰? https://youtu.be/bDvwsqBb3tE --- Roychowdhury 目前是 McGill 社會系副教授。八歲時移居美國,七歲以前住在加爾各答。2014 年拿到紐約大學社會學博士,畢業後直接到 McGill 當助理教授,直到現在。現在應該是 42 歲,還非常年輕。 --- 註1:Roychowdhury 的田野是 2009-2011 年間做的,距今 10 年以上,印度目前的情況可能有所改善。 註2:雖然根據普查資料,也只有一半左右的印度男性,有十年級以上的學歷。 註3:印度通膨嚴重,該研究統計資料,最晚至 2008 年,這裡是將 2008 年的 32,000 INR,換算通膨後得到的結果。 --- 參考資料: 1. Roychowdhury, Poulami. 2021. Capable Women, Incapable States: Negotiating Violence and Rights in India. Oxford University Press. 2. Anukriti, S., Sungoh Kwon and Nishith Prakash. Saving for Dowry: Evidence from Rural India. Journal of Development Economics 154 102750. 3. Roychowdhury, Poulami. 2021. Incorporation: Governing Gendered Violence in a State of Disempowerment. American Journal of Sociology 126(4): 852-888. 4. Roychowdhury, Poulami. 2019. Illicit Justice: Aspirational-Strategic Subjects and the Political Economy of Domestic Violence Law in India. Law & Social Inquiry 44(2):1-24.
When Sampat Pal Devi witnesses a women being beaten mercilessly by her husband she could not just walk by and ignore it. When her intercession fails, she returns the next day with five other women and their lathi (bamboo rods) and they beat the abuser. Word of their justice immediately spreads, and women begin flocking to Devi to help them right the terrible wrongs they have suffered at the hands of men and corrupt officials through the region, and THE GULABI GANG (Translation: The Pink Gang) is born. Listen now to hear Devi's whole story and learn more about this incredible group of Indian defenders and all the work they are doing to protect and empower the women of India's Uttar Pradesh. — A Broad is a woman who lives by her own rules. Broads You Should Know is the podcast about the Broads who helped shape our world! 3 Ways you can help support the podcast: Write a review on Apple Podcasts Share your favorite episode on social media / tell a friend about the show! Send us an email with a broad suggestion, question, or comment at BroadsYouShouldKnow@gmail.com — Broads You Should Know is hosted by Sara Gorsky. IG: @SaraGorsky Web master / site design: www.BroadsYouShouldKnow.com — Broads You Should Know is produced by Sara Gorsky & edited by Chloe Skye
Grab your bamboo sticks, weirdos! It's time for another episode for the LADIES! This is part two of our WOMEN IN HISTORY series where we cover stories about women that we didn't hear about in our history or social studies courses that PROBABLY should have been covered. Joined once again by Miss Patreon herself- Amy Hanselmann- this week Lauren is starting us off with some FEMALE VIGILANTES! It's not often that you see women taking revenge on a large scale such as this and why we had never heard of these bad bitches is beyond me. First up is Diana the Bus Driver Hunter out of Juarez Mexico and yes you did hear that right. Sick and tired of all of the attacks on women in her city she took it upon herself to fight back in the deadliest way and made men on public transportation think twice about putting their hands on a woman. And we learn about the Gulabi Gang out of Northern India; a fierce group of women wearing HOT HOT PINK saris and carrying bamboo sticks (they hurt worse than they sound, just ask Ashley) to hunt down men who have participated in domestic abuse, child marriages, and ensuring that women and children's human rights are protected and provided. And Ashley brings us home with the incredible story of Mileva Maric, a Serbian physicist and mathematician who you've never heard of-- but you've ABSOLUTELY heard of her work. She was the first wife, and truly the other half, of Albert Einstein. She turned in the papers.. but why was it only her husband's name written at the top?
Real talk about Feminism: A Podcast for Female Empowerment and Gender Equality
This week Halie tells us about the Gulabi Gang in India. They are an amazing group of women who empower others and fight for gender equality. Please leave us a rating and a review and share this episode with a friend! Follow us on Instagram @realtalkaboutfeminismpod Follow is on TikTok @realtalkaboutfeminismpod Subscribe to our YouTube channel Subscribe to our email newsletter here! Sources: https://www.cnn.com/2022/06/29/football/carson-pickett-us-women-soccer-spt-intl/index.html https://gulabigang.in/ https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/sampat-pal-s-gulabi-gang-fights-for-gender-revolution-in-india-1.2926690#:~:text=It's%20difficult%20to%20pin%20down,the%20rights%20of%20the%20poor. https://www.unicef.org/india/what-we-do/end-child-marriage#:~:text=Estimates%20suggest%20that%20each%20year,15%2D19%20are%20currently%20married. https://www.bmj.com/company/newsroom/1-in-3-women-in-india-is-likely-to-have-been-subjected-to-intimate-partner-violence/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/real-talk-about-feminism-a-podcast-for-female-empowerment/support
The Gulabi Gang is a women's rights organisation that focuses on social work for women in North India. It is also famous for its violent reactionary actions against people that commit crimes against women.Gulabi Gang was founded by Sampat Pal, in a distant remote village in the state of Uttar Pradesh. The village, called Banda, was one of many many small towns that were heavily impacted by violence against women. Sampat, along with almost 300,000 members, organised a women's movement that spread across the state of UP.These women called themselves the Gulabi Gang – because they dressed in gulabi clothing. Gulabi loosely translates to “the colour of a rose” or… well, the colour pink! Clad in pink sarees, the members of the Gulabi Gang armed themselves with bamboo sticks and other weapons, ready to use them to protect the powerless from abuse and fight corruption that causes women's issues.The group's mission statement is – “Support and train women to enhance their basic skills to become economically secure and develop the confidence to protect themselves from abuse through sustainable livelihood options.”Aside from protesting peacefully in certain cases, the Gulabi Gang is notorious for taking the law into their own hands. This has included: hunting down alleged perpetrators of physical or sexual violence, causing unrest among local populations in order to right anything that they considered wrong, and publicly shaming people they considered offenders, in a manner bordering on defamation.Find out more at - https://ivmpodcasts.com/miss-conduct-blogYou can follow our hosts on Instagram.Miss Conduct: https://instagram.com/missconductpodRagavi: https://www.instagram.com/ragi.dosai/Nisha: https://www.instagram.com/just.nishful.thinking/You can listen to this show and other awesome shows on the IVM Podcasts app on Android: https://ivm.today/android or iOS: https://ivm.today/ios, or any other podcast app. You can check out our website at https://shows.ivmpodcasts.com/featuredDo follow IVM Podcasts on social media.We are @IVMPodcasts on Facebook, Twitter, & Instagram.Follow the show across platforms:Spotify, Apple Podcasts, JioSaavan, Gaana, Google Podcasts, Amazon Music
In todays episode UndeadMat and KrampusCody sit and talk with Kanan and Raven of the show Grrrls Like Us to learn more about the show. Talk about the social issues with accented mhmms, get exposed to some more new music, and learn about Gulabi Gang a vigilante in Banda district, Uttar Pradesh, which was formed as a response to widespread domestic abuse and other violence against women. Girrrls Like Us social media plugs. https://open.spotify.com/show/1u9HIwNA8XA4egOFDfKF2r?si=lVzSsOJUToi3EwnxzO-M_w https://www.grrrlslikeus.com/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXbSbOv4wwR5aQsfTURZdzQ Musical Break 1 Artist: Everything But The Everything Song: In Love... Again everythingbuttheeverything.com everythingbuthteeverything.bandcamp.com Artist: HEADWORM Song: (VOID) headwyrm.bandcamp.com instagram.com/headworm.mp3 instagram.com/cursed.records . Break 2 Artist: The Slime Song: Death Champs theslimehardcore.bandcamp.com theslimehardcore.com Break 3 Artist: It's Never Lupus Song: Police Normality https://itsneverlupus.bandcamp.com/ Artist: Chiliocosm Song: Fight or Flight chiliocosm.bandcamp.com instagram.com/chiliogram Support the Show: Get PRHP Merch here: https://teespring.com/fr/stores/punk-rock-horror-podcast Check us and Slash 'N Cast out: https://www.slashncast.net/ https://www.slashncast.network/show/punkrockhorror/ Follow us on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWfJ18KWbdMz7tSLQyvov0g Send your Info to: punkrockhorrorpodcast@gmail.com Like and Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/punkhorrorpodcast/ Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/OfficialPRHP https://twitter.com/krampuscody?s=20&t=G3uBE0CRee08Z2dRdqjbbA https://twitter.com/zachreelnerd?s=20&t=G3uBE0CRee08Z2dRdqjbbA Follow the crew on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theundeadmatt/ https://www.instagram.com/punkrockhorrorpodcast_official/ https://www.instagram.com/bigbootstudio/ https://www.instagram.com/reelnerdzach/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/matthew-mccord/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/matthew-mccord/support
In the early 2000s, Sampat Pal Devi, a villager from a remote part of India's Uttar Pradesh state, started a women's rights group which now has thousands of followers across the country. The Gulabi Gang were originally vigilantes who fought back with sticks against wife-beaters, rapists and corrupt police officers. Now a more mainstream organisation, the Gulabi Gang are known for wearing pink saris and have even inspired a Bollywood film. Sampat Pal Devi talks to Reena Stanton-Sharma.
Fala aí gente! Aqui é a Nandu ;) Hoje é dia de falar sobre o primeiro filme de Madhuri Dixit que eu assisti, Gulaab Gang, um filme que tem como heroínas um grupo de mulheres que lutam contra a injustiça e a desonestidade. A história (ficcional) foi inspirada na atuação grupo de mulheres Gulabi Gang, que defendem mulheres que sofrem violência e também ensinam elas a se protegerem. Playlist das músicas do Filme Trecho documental sobre as Gulabis citado no episódio Roteiro e Pesquisa @Nandu_u22Edição @AudioHeroesRedes sociais: Instagram e twitter e-mail: falaainandu@gmail.com A cada quinze dias tem um novo episódio.Beijos e Phir Milenge!
In Episode 70, Morgan tells us about the Gulabi Gang, a group of vigilante women in northern India who fight against domestic abuse, and Heather covers Lady Hester Standhope, an explorer and adventurer who left high society in Regency-era England to travel the Middle East. Brave-ass betches!
This week's episode is full of pussy puns, box wine, and enough walking to put Lord of the Rings to shame! First, Emily talks about the Gulabi Gang, a vigilante group of women wielding bamboo sticks who beat up rapists and abusers, while offering education and financial assistance to impoverished women! Then, Kelley shares the adventures of mountain climber Gertrude 'Trude' Benham who spent her life bagging peaks, cuckholding men out of mountains, and traversing the globe. Grab your bamboo stick and your hiking boots, because it's time to wine about herstory!**justiceforbreonna.org ** Mornings with u by Barradeen | https://soundcloud.com/barradeenMusic promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.comCreative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unportedhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en_US Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/winingaboutherstory/overview)
Story time with Katie & Allie. Grab a glass and pour a drink. Let’s talk the Gulabi Gang of India & Jocelyn Bell Burnell
Hey everyone, its our Sexy 60! That's right, the world is in chaos and we can't leave our houses, but somehow, we made it to our 60th episode! This episode was recorded before we were instructed to avoid other humans, but have no fear, we will make it through this! This episode, we talk about the evils of pyramid schemes and plastic and the forgotten hero of Tupperware - as well as the badass ladies who beat terrible men with bamboo canes! Sit back, enjoy the quarantine time, and take care of yourselves!
This week's featured idealists are the Gulabi Gang (which isn't a gang at all but an organization) which mobilizes women and some men in India to press for reforms around domestic violence and unprosecuted rapes of women. The Big Interview is with Michael Rexford, a Los Angeles attorney and idealist who's founded LightHopeLife.org, a suicide…
From the women of the pink-garbed, stick-wielding Gulabi Gang of Uttar Pradesh, India, to the LGBTQ sawed-off pool cue-swinging Lavender Panthers in San Francisco, to a secret group of Holocaust survivors bent on poisoning 6 million Germans, a nation for a nation, join Amanda Knox as she explores bizarre examples of what can happen when society’s tyrannized rise up and take matters into their own hands.
A group of women in India that fight for those the system works against. Real Life superheroes. This week we feature Sampat Pal the founder of The Gulabi Gang. Hosts: Broghanne Jessamine and Mikayla Orrson Music: Sterling Nickles website: www.elementalwomenproductions.com instagram: @elementalwomenproductions --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/elementalwomenproductions/support
Director Nishtha Jain joins UCSB’s Bishnupriya Ghosh (English and Global Studies) for a post-screening discussion of her 2012 film Gulabi Gang. The conversation includes Jain’s early career as a documentary filmmaker, the film’s examination of violence against women in India both as a result of the dowry system and a general social devaluation of women, and how she worked with Gulabi Gang leader Sampat Pal on location with individuals that were sometimes reluctant to speak on their own behalf or who felt conflicting familial loyalties. Jain addresses the film’s unusual three-part structure and her desire to let the complexities of the film’s subject shape the structure, rather than the reverse. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 34844]
Director Nishtha Jain joins UCSB’s Bishnupriya Ghosh (English and Global Studies) for a post-screening discussion of her 2012 film Gulabi Gang. The conversation includes Jain’s early career as a documentary filmmaker, the film’s examination of violence against women in India both as a result of the dowry system and a general social devaluation of women, and how she worked with Gulabi Gang leader Sampat Pal on location with individuals that were sometimes reluctant to speak on their own behalf or who felt conflicting familial loyalties. Jain addresses the film’s unusual three-part structure and her desire to let the complexities of the film’s subject shape the structure, rather than the reverse. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 34844]
Director Nishtha Jain joins UCSB’s Bishnupriya Ghosh (English and Global Studies) for a post-screening discussion of her 2012 film Gulabi Gang. The conversation includes Jain’s early career as a documentary filmmaker, the film’s examination of violence against women in India both as a result of the dowry system and a general social devaluation of women, and how she worked with Gulabi Gang leader Sampat Pal on location with individuals that were sometimes reluctant to speak on their own behalf or who felt conflicting familial loyalties. Jain addresses the film’s unusual three-part structure and her desire to let the complexities of the film’s subject shape the structure, rather than the reverse. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 34844]
Director Nishtha Jain joins UCSB’s Bishnupriya Ghosh (English and Global Studies) for a post-screening discussion of her 2012 film Gulabi Gang. The conversation includes Jain’s early career as a documentary filmmaker, the film’s examination of violence against women in India both as a result of the dowry system and a general social devaluation of women, and how she worked with Gulabi Gang leader Sampat Pal on location with individuals that were sometimes reluctant to speak on their own behalf or who felt conflicting familial loyalties. Jain addresses the film’s unusual three-part structure and her desire to let the complexities of the film’s subject shape the structure, rather than the reverse. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 34844]
Director Nishtha Jain joins UCSB’s Bishnupriya Ghosh (English and Global Studies) for a post-screening discussion of her 2012 film Gulabi Gang. The conversation includes Jain’s early career as a documentary filmmaker, the film’s examination of violence against women in India both as a result of the dowry system and a general social devaluation of women, and how she worked with Gulabi Gang leader Sampat Pal on location with individuals that were sometimes reluctant to speak on their own behalf or who felt conflicting familial loyalties. Jain addresses the film’s unusual three-part structure and her desire to let the complexities of the film’s subject shape the structure, rather than the reverse. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 34844]
Director Nishtha Jain joins UCSB’s Bishnupriya Ghosh (English and Global Studies) for a post-screening discussion of her 2012 film Gulabi Gang. The conversation includes Jain’s early career as a documentary filmmaker, the film’s examination of violence against women in India both as a result of the dowry system and a general social devaluation of women, and how she worked with Gulabi Gang leader Sampat Pal on location with individuals that were sometimes reluctant to speak on their own behalf or who felt conflicting familial loyalties. Jain addresses the film’s unusual three-part structure and her desire to let the complexities of the film’s subject shape the structure, rather than the reverse. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 34844]
Hello, Lovelies! Ever heard of the Gulabi Gang? Well they're our heroes now. Started by Sampat Pal in Uttar Pradesh, India, these women vigilantes are taking things into their own hands and working for justice and equal rights for women. Known by their signature pink saris (and bamboo sticks) these women rock and you need to learn about them. Join us this week as Tiffany teaches us about real life super heroes, Ashley gets emotional (again, but it's good this time!), and Rebecca wonders where she can get her own bamboo stick. This week's drink break is brought to you by Frigay the 13th! Make sure to check out this awesome podcast! Links can be found in this week's blog: https://wp.me/paqGnY-9L Website: https://theladiesofstrange.com Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/theladiesofstrange Links to our social media and other fun stuff: https://theladiesofstrange.com/links/
The Gulabi Gang is a women’s activist group in India known for wearing pink and taking justice into their own hands. Learn more about this kick-ass vigilante group in this week’s episode. Show Notes: Sari: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sari Gulabi Gang documentary: … The post The Pink Gang of India appeared first on Incredible Stories Podcast.
Taking a break from the more hard hitting issues that have been covered of late the Melting Pot trio of Amo, Fatima and Thomas regale the tales of what cemented their passion of Video Games. Fatima comes up with a truly epic idea for the brown narrative involving the Gulabi gang who are a group of Indian female vigilantes who provide aid to oppressed and abused women in the country. The group has been active since 2010 and it has been reported that they number in the region of 270,000. The women wear pink saris symbolizing strength and carry bamboo sticks that can be used as weapons!